No.
The internet is amazing for looking up facts, but when it comes to translating, it is awful. Take for instance a French sentence I tried to translate into English. It came out as "We have a happy day was busy." when translating from English to Spanish, usually the verb is not conjugated correctly or in the wrong tense, or just flat out not the right word. (Spatula translates into knife depending on what sentence it is in.)
My point is, if we cannot even program a useful translator, how could we hope to create a translator that takes normal English and morphs it into garbled poetry?
No there isn't but try using adjectives and verbs. If you still need help e-mail the sentence at moriahcatherine@hotmail.com
There is one at the related link.
Yes there is
That type of sentence is an interrogative sentence.
what is the clauses, sentence type, and sentence purpoes
It is an interrogative sentence.
InterrogativeA complete sentence
Type the participial phrase in this sentence. Type the participial phrase in this sentence.
I do not think so
Proverbs often have a poetic type of form, but they do not have to.
Proverbs often have a poetic type of form, but they do not have to.
n simple,predicate
Try in-a-sentence.com or dictionary.cambridge.org that gives you the meaning and a sentence if you type the word
Proverbs often have a poetic type of form, but they do not have to.
Try in-a-sentence.com or dictionary.cambridge.org that gives you the meaning and a sentence if you type the word. See the links below.
Proverbs often have a poetic type of form, but they do not have to.
Proverbs often have a poetic type of form, but they do not have to.
Iambic pentameter is the type of poetic meter that is commonly associated with William Shakespeare.
It's none of your business.
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